Teen Texting Sees Sharp Increase

Cell-phone texting has become the preferred form of basic communication between teens and their friends, according to a new report from the Pew Internet & American Life Project. Daily text messaging among teens has increased in the past 18 months from 38 percent of teens texting friends daily in 2008, to 54 percent of teens texting daily in 2009. The average teen sends and receives 50 or more messages per day, or 1,500 per month. Boys typically send and receive 30 texts a day while girls send and receive 80 messages per day. Older girls are the most active texters, with 14-17 year old girls sending 100 or more messages a day or more than 3,000 texts a month. While many teens are avid texters, a small number are not. One-fifth of teen texters (22%) send and receive just 1-10 texts a day or 30-300 a month. “The widespread availability of unlimited texting plans has transformed communication patterns of American teens, many of whom now conduct substantial portions of their daily conversations with their friends via texting,” said Amanda Lenhart, Senior Researcher at the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project and a co-author on the report. “But what’s important to remember here is that this is a shift in the location and style of teens’ communication with friends, not necessarily a radical change or expansion of it.” The survey found 75 percent of those ages 12-17 now have cell phones, up from 45 percent in 2004. These cell phone users place calls on their phone much less often than texting. On average tens make about five calls per day on cells. They still to prefer to deal with their parents by calling them instead of texting them. Pew also found teens uses their cells for a variety of activities besides texting and talking including:

Tags: 17 year old girls, cell phone texting, co author, communication patterns, Friends, Internet, pew internet, pew research center, play music, project, substantial portions, Technology, texters

Google Talks Next Steps for Fiber Network

Update:

Tags: answers, data, Internet, manager, mountain, mountain-view, product-manager, project, Review and Story, Videos, white, white-spaces

Report: Facebook Location Feature To Bow At f8

At the first f8 conference, Facebook Platform was launched.

Tags: developers, location, Nbsp, over-the-status, privacy issues, project, service-offered, software tools

Liveblogging: The State Of The Search Union (Google, Yahoo & Experts)

Watch the Keynote live at live.webpronews.com . At SMX West in Santa Clara, the State of the Search Union keynote is taking place today. It’s moderated by Chris Sherman, Executive Editor of Search Engine Land, and features SEL Contributing Editor Vanessa Fox, Google Analytics Evangelist Avinash Kaushik, Yahoo Director of Search Marketing David Roth, and Misty Locke, President, Range Online Media and Chief Strategy Officer of iProspect. The official description for this keynote says: We’ve just come through the most turbulent period in history for search marketers. Economic disruption, massive algorithm updates, the disappearance of a major player through consolidation with one of its former competitors… these events and others have reshaped the search landscape, creating both challenges and opportunities for search marketers. On this panel we’ve assembled some of the sharpest minds in search to discuss where things stand and where we’re going – you won’t want to miss the insights and recommendations from this group of super-savvy panelists. I will liveblog the event below, when it starts 9:00am Pacific/12:00pm Eastern (please forgive typos): Liveblogging starts: 12:00 EST: should be starting anytime now… 12:03 People are taking the stage…getting set up with audio… 12:04 Sherman: An interesting year in search. Often not a whole lot has happened, usually just Google, Google,

Tags: countries, Facebook, Misty Locke, project, Review and Story, Search, search engine, yahoo